Blog
Practical insights on AI, writing, and content strategy
Marketers’ AI superpowers: Use Vibe Coding to turn ideas into online sales pages and brand websites
The biggest bottleneck for marketers is not coming up with ideas, but the waiting between thinking and doing them. This article shares how to use Vibe Coding and Claude Code to allow marketers to use dialogue to create sales pages, brand websites, and entire marketing workflows—no programming knowledge required.
Free writing: the lowest threshold for improving your writing skills, you can practice it in 5 minutes after a meal
Many friends who want to learn to write are stuck at the “I don’t have a writing habit” level. The introductory exercise I recommend has always been free writing: don’t care about writing style or structure. You can practice it 5 minutes after meals and 10 minutes before going to bed. This article shares the methods I have used to help students get started with free writing over the years, the three core principles, and how to develop it into a lifelong writing habit.
Intention-centered communication model: Cognitive revolution in the AI era, from Vibe Coding to a new paradigm of personal branding
AI in 2026 is not just a tool upgrade, but a deep cognitive revolution. When execution costs approach zero, what really determines value is no longer the technical threshold, but the ability to define intentions. This article is an extended version of my column in the Economic Daily, talking about how Vibe Coding, contextual authority, second brains and AI agents can reshape the work philosophy of digital nomads.
In the AI era, building a personal brand starts with choosing a good website and a high-quality registrar
The AI era has lowered the threshold for Vibe Coding to a record low, and more and more people can set up their own websites on weekends. But when the website is going online, the first thing that will get stuck is not the program, but the domain. This article shares my five principles and four tips for choosing domain names over the years, as well as the registrars I recommend for international and Taiwanese domain names.
Inspiration is a bonus, but ability is your duty: nine fields and a set of workflows where writing coaches proactively collect creative inspiration
One of the most frequently asked questions by writing coaches is: "Teacher, where can I find inspiration?" The answer I have accumulated over the years is straightforward: inspiration is a bonus, and ability is a must. This article shares nine areas where I actively collect inspiration, four key points of observation, and a set of database processes to make inspiration available for a long time.
The three most common bottlenecks in writing: mediocrity, blandness, and flatness, and the way I’ve overcome them over the years
Most people cannot write well not because of their writing skills, but because they are stuck in three bottlenecks: mediocrity, blandness, and flatness. This article breaks down the causes of Sanping, shares the specific methods I have used to overcome the past over the years, and provides a five-step workflow from technique to physique.
AI is not just technology, but a future capability: a student’s two-year review
I received a student’s two-year experience sharing. From the first time she came into contact with the AI course at the Hsinchu Foreign Trade Association in 2024, to today when she signed up for two classes at once again, she wrote down the entire journey. She said something at the end of the article: "Learning is never about catching up with others, but about giving your future self more choices." This article is her full text, plus three things I want to say next.
He hit a home run without even realizing it──Three things I saw at Xie Wenxian’s new class launch conference
2,596 games, 14,365 hours, 150,700 visitors—Xian Ge (Tse Wen-Hsien)’s records over the past twenty years, every transaction has been left behind. At the launch of his new course "From Ordinary to Extraordinary: Xie Wenxian's Influential Action Course", I saw three things: discipline is his most understated talent, the home run metaphor of "Money Ball", and the "willful high quality" between the two teachers.
The two foundations of writing: the sense of object and the sense of picture, let your words pass through the screen and live in the reader's mind
Have you written a lot but failed to impress people? The problem is often not the word count, but the "sense of object" and "sense of image". The former solves "Who are you writing for?" and the latter solves "What does he take away after reading it?" This article breaks down how these two writing foundations are built, how to use them, and how to calibrate each other so that your words are not just read, but remembered.
Inspiration will not wait for you: Use MCP to connect Voicenotes and content production Skills, a complete method to turn voices into articles
How many pieces of inspiration are lying on your phone that you recorded but never turned into a work? This tutorial completely breaks down how I use MCP to connect Voicenotes voice notes, and use it with my own designed content production skills to turn a piece of voice into a high-value article. The content covers the entire production line process, three levels of business value, how to choose the right automation scenario, and three ideas for implementation.
The starting point for making full use of AI is not to pick tools, but to dismantle the workflow: Written for you in the first year of AI agent and vibe coding
Everyone is asking which AI agent to learn in 2026 and whether to keep up with vibe coding, but few people ask: What exactly does my job consist of? The real starting point for making full use of AI is not to pick tools, but to disassemble your own workflow. From the five-step dismantling framework, Anthropic’s delegation gap, to McKinsey’s research on process redesign, we will show you why only those who dismantle can use AI.
What creators really sell is not words: Listen to Lin Yutang's "Creator's Awakening Day." Realization Class", recalibrate your three-layer realization logic
After listening to Mr. Elton’s 90-minute online lecture, I divided creator monetization into three levels—selling words, selling with words, and selling with business models. This article is written for every friend who wants to make a living by creating: the romantic expectation of purely selling words, the two limitations of copywriting, and the essential calibration of business models as the real leverage.
Tools will change, but principles will last: Read "Click to Grow" by Meta Marketing Chief Schutz to regain your judgment in digital marketing
Over the years of writing a column for the Economic Daily, I’ve watched too many new tools being touted as the future of marketing. The reason why "Click to Grow" by Meta Marketing Chief Alex Schutz is worth reading is not because of the tricks, but because it helps you build judgment—grasp the two compasses of "Tools evolve, principles are lasting" and "Amplification is everything." Only when the tide recedes can you know what truly makes marketing effective.
Soul backup in your phone: If someone picked up your phone, how would ChatGPT describe you?
I threw a prompt about death to my commonly used AI: Pretend that the owner of the phone has passed away, how would you describe him? The words that surfaced a few seconds later hit home on something I rarely tell people, or even admit to myself. In this era, the people who have seen your thinking process most completely may not be the people closest to you, but the things you thought were just tools.
Service is marketing: In the AI era, the best marketing is one that makes people feel that they are not marketing.
In traditional logic, marketing is responsible for igniting desire, and service is responsible for cleaning up the mess. But when AI evolves from a consulting tool to an executive life agent, the most brilliant marketing is to first use services to establish irreplaceable dependence and let transactions happen naturally. This article talks about assistant marketing, the dividends of first-party data, and why future marketers must grow the brains of product managers.